Frequency of deadlifting (or any other big compound moves for that matter):
Sure a typical bodybuilding program will have them once a week or once a fortnight. And sure those guys put on some great mass (and decent strength). But what does an olympic lifting or powerlifting program have? What are the Eastern European and Chinese national teams doing? 26 sets of 5 heavy compound lifts a
year?
Olympic Weightlifting - QWA - Training Programs - Advanced
MIKE'S GYM | Programs
Don't get me wrong there is a real risk of overtraining but I think it is foolish to think that more frequent training is impossible or not a useful tool. And again to emphasise that I'm not saying to do 1RM sessions several times a week.
HSPU v Shoulder Press:
I agree that it isn't really possible to load the HSPU; weighted vests are possible but uncomfortable and they are very limited in how heavy they can be. However having said that it is possible to make it progressively harder (not in order):
- By increasing the volume (reps and/or sets)
- Using paralletes to increase depth
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Clapping handstand pushup
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HSPU on gymnastics rings
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One armed HSPU
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HSPU on chairs
- One-armed HSPU (couldn't find a video/picture)
- HSPU using chains/something else unstable as paralletes.
Happily concede though that these are all much more technical than simply putting more weight on the bar for a shoulder press. HSPU is great to build up all of the smaller muscles which help stabilise the joint and I've found that they helped improve the weight I can shift on the shoulder press and reduced my shoulder injury rate.
I still shoulder press though because lifting heavy things overhead is a fundamental skill and a key component of the CJ.
Varying volume:
Powerlifters are interested in strength. Not mass. Not endurance. Not speed. They want to lift the maximum possible ammount. That means working towards and aiming for 1RM increases. Of course someone wanting to build 1RM wouldn't make very good progress working at 10 reps and that's why they don't.
For non-powerlifters though; people who want to build strength, size, speed, endurance, the 'whole package' varying the rep and set pattern is a great tool. The body has different types of muscle fibres and different energy production systems. Obviously there is overlap between these however it is possible and perfectly reasonable to train them relatively seperately using different workouts.
This is the same principle of developing distance running and weightlifting at the same time, you won't be as good in either skill as someone who trains just one of them, but you'll be much better than the specialist is - in the skill they
don't train.
Pyramidding within a workout can be a useful tool to warm-up/cool-down when going for a max weight effort. It also allows you to use some pre-fatigued training (if you're into that).
Varying it week to week however is a good way to train the range of muscle fibres and energy production systems. Doing 100 x 20kgs CJs works the body in a very different way to 5 x 1RM CJs. The same is true of the other big lifts. Squats, deads, snatchs, presses, power cleans, etc etc.